for the love of anonomyous

DaSleeper

Trolling Hypocrites
May 27, 2007
33,676
1,666
113
Northern Ontario,
How many shots did they fire?
Maybe if you asked the cop, instead of your usual one liner attempt at sarcasm....you would get the same answer I got from my ole' man when I was young and asked him how many shots it took him to get that moose hanging in the garage.....

"There was only one moose!"
 

Glacier

Electoral Member
Apr 24, 2015
360
0
16
Okanagan
Anonymous is intriguing, but they are a group of vigilantes who believe in shooting first, and asking questions second... unless it's the police shooting. Let's take the Amanda Todd thing as an example. They kept "finding" the guy who was bullying* her, and then it would turn out that it was the wrong guy. They didn't care because the guy they did "expose" probably wasn't a good guy anyway. Typical vigilante attitude.

* Bullying is a euphemism for sexual exploitation.
 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
3,023
0
36
alberta/B.C.
Last week the RCMP shot a protester at the Site C dam hearings in Dawson Creek. In what passes for minds of conspiracy theorists evil corp(BC Hydro)pays RCMP members cash to kill protesters. The fact that said nutbar was waving a knife around and did not put it down as ordered has nothing to do with it.
true right wingers,........making stories up as you go,this content is crazy.
there is no conspiracy there is a dead man,a wrong dead man that is.
mental health nurses are being employed with law enforcement,unarmed mental health nurses that is,this program is successful.
there is no indication this man was a nutbar,the only nutbar which is evident is the Officer thus far.
ONCE AGAIN,THE OFFICERS HISTORY IS GOING TO SPEAK VOLUMES ON WHO THE NUTBAR IS.

Rumour has it,this cop is dirty.
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
6,379
4,047
113
Edmonton
Last week the RCMP shot a protester at the Site C dam hearings in Dawson Creek. In what passes for minds of conspiracy theorists evil corp(BC Hydro)pays RCMP members cash to kill protesters. The fact that said nutbar was waving a knife around and did not put it down as ordered has nothing to do with it.



Thank you! Haven't been watching much TV so wasn't aware of this happening.


Doesn't the RCMP have tasers? I mean gun vs knife....


Just askin'
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
47
48
67
oh well, if rumor has it then.

 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
3,023
0
36
alberta/B.C.
Enough. The Mounties always get their man.
sure they do!

does anyone have a solution or ideas for nurses to protect themselves against abusive,dementia,combative,confused,spitting,psychotic,patients........how about tasers?restraint?gunfire?cold showers?handcuffs?fighting back?kicking the **** out of grandma?,Giving extra drugs?siderooms?should nurses have guns/
what is your support and ideas on this?
i am so happy to have encountered your Liberal thoughts on "protecting"one's self in the workplace.
thank you for the reality check and support.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
39,163
3,612
113
Anonymous vigilantism fills hole in traditional justice system, says Rehtaeh Parsons' dad
Geordon Omand, The Canadian Press
First posted: Monday, August 03, 2015 01:41 PM EDT | Updated: Monday, August 03, 2015 02:02 PM EDT
VANCOUVER -- While experts and officials decry recent instances of vigilantism by the hacktivist group Anonymous, one beneficiary of the group's activism is adamant that justice would never have been served without involvement by the clandestine organization.
Glen Canning said he believes Anonymous' threats to publicly identify boys allegedly involved in the cyberbullying that predated his daughter Rehtaeh Parsons' death prompted Halifax police to reopen their investigation and eventually lay charges.
None of this would have happened if Anonymous hadn't stepped in, said Canning. "I believe that absolutely. I have no question about that at all."
Her family alleges Parsons was sexually assaulted in November 2011 and bullied for months when a digital photo of the assault was passed around her school. She died after attempting suicide in 2013. An angry post from Parsons' mother brought the case to the attention of Anonymous, said Canning.
"Why go through the courts? Why go through the system?" he said in a telephone interview from Nova Scotia. "Why be revictimized again when you can write something and get ahold of some people online who can really do a hell of a lot more to bring you a sense of justice than the police and the courts can?"
Anonymous is a shadowy, loosely knit collective known for its online activism targeting governments, corporations and religious groups around the world on prominent social justice issues.
The group made headlines last month after one of its alleged members was shot and killed by police in Dawson Creek, in northern British Columbia.
Reacting to the shooting, Anonymous threatened to temporarily shut down police websites and release hacked government documents related to the overseas communication capabilities of Canada's spy agency.
The RCMP national site and the website for Dawson Creek both went down briefly after the threat. Mounties later said it was a maintenance issue.
The group threatened to go public with more "stunning secrets" unless the government named and charged the RCMP officers involved in the shooting of James McIntyre, 48. B.C.'s police watchdog is investigating the shooting.
Bystander video revealed McIntyre was wearing Anonymous' trademark Guy Fawkes mask. Fawkes was the most well-known member of a plot to blow up the British Parliament in 1605.
"Stuff like this happens because the system is broken," said Canning. "If we can fix the system ... then maybe we wouldn't need Anonymous."
Dalhousie University law professor and cyberbullying expert Wayne MacKay said Anonymous has played a role in advancing the cause of justice, such as spurring governments to take action. Though no government would concede publicly it had acted in response to pressure from Anonymous, he added.
Still, MacKay raised a red flag about the group's unorthodox style of activism.
"Even if they're filling a hole in our justice system does that justify breaking the law?" he said.
"Often the answer to that would be no. We do have a structured justice system for a reason and we shouldn't necessarily allow a sort of vigilante response even if we think the main justice system is moving too slowly."
Central to the dilemma is a concept found right in the collective's name: anonymity.
MacKay described the members as unelected and unaccountable purveyors of justice.
"Because they're anonymous and hide behind masks they're not responsible or accountable for what they do," he said.
Former B.C. Court of Appeal justice and provincial attorney general Wally Oppal was unapologetic in his condemnation of the group's methods.
"There's no excuse for vigilantism," he said in an interview. "It's a recipe for anarchy."
He chided the activist group for failing to give investigators enough time to probe the Dawson Creek shooting.
Oppal said the public is justified in feeling frustration with delays in the justice system, but there needs to be a process based on fairness.
Anonymous claimed responsibility for a June attack that shut down several federal sites and wreaked havoc with e-mail -- billing it as a protest against the federal security legislation that broadened the mandate for Canada's spy agency.
There is obviously interest in "trying to identify these hackers, it goes without saying," said Public Safety Minister Steven Blaney last week.
"All the agencies involved in security ... we'd really like to be able to put an end to this."
Anonymous vigilantism fills hole in traditional justice system, says Rehtaeh Par
 

personal touch

House Member
Sep 17, 2014
3,023
0
36
alberta/B.C.
Many years ago I met a fellow at a party who was bragging about some cars he had broken into. I didn't know him but I punched him in the face anyway because I have had my cars broken into and finally......finally......I had one of the low lifes.

I feel the same way now and I pray to the gods to deliver to me someone who claims to have written a computer virus so I can kick the absolute living **** out of him. I will even accept a bit of jail time for this privilege. Anarchist groups like Anonymous who operate outside the bounds of democratic law yet enjoy the comfort and protection of those laws otherwise in their regular lives are another group of individuals I'd like to "meet" and I might even be able to if I attended circle jerks and comic book conventions I suppose.
good to see you are drinking your milk tough guy!